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Here Thar Be Monsters!

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26.10.11

OK, Now What?

Got a note from one of my faithful readers in Pennsylvania, in response to my article, "See Ya And Raise Ya:"

We are on the same wave length, it is almost scary, like being into someone elses mind.

I posted a think about the Catholic church and got a response that shows "people hear what they want to hear", so I guess you have to save your breath. So much is happening so fast that it is getting hard to keep up. I don't think the masses want a world bank, they want a fair shake and know that the banks are the ones that are preventing it. Then you get all the "political invaders" in there, stirring them up. Most people don't want to face the facts, that is a truth.

My reply, in part, was along the lines of: we have to give up trying to wake folks up, and start discussing what we're going to do once the whole damn thing collapses.

From the way things look over here on the Far Side, the complete and utter cave-in of the New World Order (i.e. what we got now). And we shouldn't be thinking about what scraps we can save. It's better to utterly destroy the whole thing, lest it rise again from the ashes.

It's like that scene at the end of 'Time Bandits,' after they've completely baked Evil. The Supreme Being tells the boys to be careful and get every bit cleaned up, or Evil will just rise again.

Another metaphor is bamboo, which is rather apt for our current surroundings. If you cut down a bamboo stalk, two grow back in its place. If you don't dig down about two feet and make a wall around the roots, then it will spread like wildfire. The only way to stop it is to uproot every bit of the plant and burn the whole thing, or you'll be cutting bamboo again in about two months.

Let's look at the situation this way. Not too long ago, you were a kook if you:

believed in black helicopters - now everyone knows about them and many know that the N-numbers and insignia are painted in infrared colors;

refused to believe the official song and dance about 9/11;

you said the Iraq/Afghanistan wars were about oil;

if you thought the next president would be worse than Reagan/Clinton/both Bushes;

believed in the existence of the New World Order;

didn't genuflect and cross yourself every time you said the name Obama.

This is all common knowledge now and it's hard to find someone to disagree with you for an entertaining argument. Frankly, if anyone still believes that America is the savior of the world and that Obama is a Man of Peace, there's no hope for them. Heck, it's even hard to find someone who admits voting for the slimeball these days. I actually hear some folks say they wish they had voted for Hillary, though I daresay that's like wishing you had Satan while Mephistopheles is poking you with his trident.

The proper way to go about this, is to wish that Obama would go hunting with Cheney. Now we're getting somewhere.

The point to all this is that we should start turning our thoughts and efforts to deciding what to do AFTER the collapse. What do we replace The System with? How do we handle banking and finance? How about governments in a post-centralized world? And should banksters and lawyers become the new N-word and F-word...unspeakable and unthinkable?

To begin the argument, I think it's obvious we can not go back to centralized anything. With the state of technology, there's no reason to have mega-cities. Most cost-center jobs can be done from the living room, while manufacturing is quickly moving towards mass-customization, meaning small, multi-purpose assembly lines scattered around in various strategic locations would allow anyone with come up with an idea and make it nearby. A prime example is the car built with a 3-D printer that hit the headlines a while back.

The guy who discovered Comet Elenin was using a rent-a-telescope in New Mexico while he sat in his house in Russia. Why can't we do that with factories?

As for banking and finance? No reason why we can't use digi-bux, as long as it's backed by something real. Each geographic location could produce their own accounting and statistics, auditable by any other geographic location. Based on the total output of a given area, they could issue a certain amount of digi-bux, which the locals would earn for goods and services, and then spend in the open markets.

If a certain region didn't want to join the world, and wanted to live like the Amish, they could. If another region wanted to become trans-human and turn themselves into cyborgs, they could. But no region would be allowed to dictate to any other region. And people traveling would have to abide by the rules of the region they were in. If they didn't like it, they could move on.

Each region would be limited to a certain physical size, say 500,000 square kilometers. No region could annex or take over another. Each would be completely autonomous and could form whatever governance it wanted, or go completely without. There would be no passports or ID cards. You are who you say you are until someone says different.

The upshot of this little discussion is that everyone gets into revolutionary fits and wants to tear down the existing regime. But no one sits around and thinks about what they're going to do afterwards. Look at Libya and Egypt right now. Just a bunch of folks wandering around picking their noses asking, "What now?" A successful revolution is NOT kicking the bad guys out, it's putting something better in their place.

There's no reason why we can't have a global set of Rights and a global integrated system. The secret is to keep it from getting centralized and sucking up all the power, wealth and resources. A good start would be to ban corporations and lawyers and banksters forever and a day.

All laws must be written in plain language, address only one issue, and can not be any longer than 10 pages. There can be individuals and groups of individuals, and groups of groups, but no entity can have individual rights except an individual. All companies and associations must have officers who are personally liable for the actions of the group under their control. Most importantly, all banks can only operate within the confines of their home region, and may never have branches or allegiances outside of it.

Finally, all trials must be jury trials, no one may hire themselves out as a 'lawyer' or 'attorney,' and judges only exist to answer questions of law and keep order. Basically, a referee. In fact, they can't wear black robes, only striped shirts. Juries are selected by randomly picking the first 12 people you find outside. No voir dire.

One last biggie. No public schools operated by a government entity. All schools must be privately owned and operated. They can teach any curriculum in any manner they see fit, and the market will choose the ones with the best track records for turning out smart people.

That's it. See how simple that was? Now all we have to do is implement it. We;ll get the chance, because revolution or not, the system is collapsing. The situation boils down to making sure we get off on the right foot after the mess is cleaned up. If we continue to do what we've always done, then we'll always get what we've always had: serfdom and poverty.

Now's the time to be thinking about what to replace the current mess with, and even starting to build on it, so that when the other leg gets kicked out from under the stool, we'll have a running start for the exits.

How can we act on this now? Well, while you're stocking up, why not think about tools you'll need. How about books? Think about what 10 books you'd want in civilization collapsed and you needed to rebuild. "The Way Things Work" would be a great start. Maybe a chemistry book or two. Some philosophy and classical discourse. Physics? Why not? Put them in your safe storage with your rice and beans and water filters.

Communications are vitally important for rebuilding. How about some radio gear and a book on electro-magnetic propagation?

Telescopes and microscopes, definitely. A good book on astronomy would help you predict the seasons. Heck, if you know the stars well enough, you can puzzle out your exact location on Earth by the declination and right ascention of key stars.

Storing away some bricks and mortar BEFORE the earthquake can never be a bad idea, both literally and metaphically.

Chances like the one we are in the middle of now only come along once every few hundred years. With some careful thought and planning, we can make a pretty good stab at doing it right this time. It's all just a matter of thinking and acting, instead of veging and watching. No one ever solved a major global issue watching football and soap operas.

By the way, has it occurred to anyone else to save old vinyl recordings? You can play them with a styrofome cup and a sewing needle, without electricity. Just a thought when you really need that Mozart fix and the CD/DVD players don't work.